THE QUADRIPOLAR MICROTUBULE SYSTEM AND MEIOTIC SPINDLE ONTOGENY IN HORNWORTS (BRYOPHYTA: ANTHOCEROTAE)
- 1 November 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Botany
- Vol. 77 (11) , 1482-1490
- https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1537-2197.1990.tb12559.x
Abstract
Ontogeny of the meiotic spindle in hornworts was studied by light microscopy of live materials, transmission electron microscopy, and indirect immunofluorescence microscopy. As in monoplastidic meiosis of mosses and Isoetes, the single plastid divides twice, and the four resultant plastids migrate into the future spore domains where they organize a quadripolar microtubule system (QMS). Additionally, a unique axial microtubule system (AMS) was found to parallel the plastid isthmus at each division in meiosis, much as in the single plastid division of mitosis. This finding is used to make a novel comparison of mitotic and meiotic spindle development. The AMS contributes directly to development of the mitotic spindle, whereas ontogeny of the meiotic spindle is more complex. Nuclear division in meiosis is delayed until after the second plastid division; the first AMS disappears without spindle formation, and the two AMSs of the second plastid division contribute to development of the QMS. Proliferation of microtubules at each plastid results in the QMS consisting of four cones of microtubules interconnecting the plastids and surrounding the nucleus. The QMS contributes to the development of a functionally bipolar spindle. The meiotic spindle is comparable to a merger of two mitotic spindles. However, the first division spindle does not terminate in what would be the poles of mitosis; instead the poles converge to orient the spindle axis midway between pairs of non‐sister plastids.Keywords
Funding Information
- National Science Foundation (BSR 8610594)
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- MONOPLASTIDIC CELL DIVISION IN LOWER LAND PLANTSAmerican Journal of Botany, 1990
- Morphogenetic plastid migration and microtubule organization during megasporogenesis inIsoetesProtoplasma, 1989
- Establishment of plastid-based quadripolarity in spore mother cells of the moss Funaria hygrometricaJournal of Cell Science, 1988
- Development of the quadripolar meiotic cytoskeleton in spore mother cells of the moss Funaria hygrometricaJournal of Cell Science, 1988
- Preprophasic microtubule systems and development of the mitotic spindle in hornworts (Bryophyta)Protoplasma, 1988
- ON CLADISTIC RELATIONSHIPS IN GREEN PLANTSTaxon, 1987
- Morphogenetic Designs and a Theory of Bryophyte Origins and DivergenceBioScience, 1980
- PHYLOGENETIC TRANSITIONS IN THE CHLOROPLASTS OF THE ANTHOCEROTALES I. THE NUMBER AND ULTRASTRUCTURE OF THE MATURE PLASTIDSAmerican Journal of Botany, 1970
- Notes on the Cytology of some LycopsidsBulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 1949
- The Spore-Mother-Cell of AnthocerosBotanical Gazette, 1899